Malaysia's AirAsia reports record RM803m loss in Q1
Kuala Lumpur
MALAYSIA'S flagship budget carrier AirAsia Group on Monday reported a first-quarter loss, battered by a collapse in air travel demand resulting from the novel coronavirus pandemic, as well as losses on a fuel hedges settlement.
It reported a net loss of RM803.3 million (S$261.4 million) for the three-month period ended March, from RM96.1 million net profit in the year-ago period.
This was the company's biggest first-quarter loss since it listed on the Malaysian bourse in November 2004, based on Refinitiv data.
Revenue was 15 per cent lower, at RM2.31 billion.
Passengers carried during the quarter fell 22 per cent to 9.85 million, while load factor - a measure of how full planes are - dropped 11 basis points to 77 per cent. Its cost per unit rose 36 per cent.
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The group said fair value losses on derivatives, as well as additional depreciation and interest on operating lease aircraft, had also impacted earnings.
The carrier added that demand had been positive since it gradually restarted domestic routes after grounding most of its fleet in March due to movement restrictions to contain the coronavirus.
"We are aiming to increase our flight frequencies to around 50 per cent of our pre-Covid operations, and we look forward to resuming all domestic routes in the coming weeks and months," Bo Lingam, president for the group's airlines business, said in a statement.
Group chief executive Tony Fernandes said the company had sought payment deferrals from suppliers and lenders to ensure sufficient working capital.
"We have also restructured a major portion of the fuel hedges with our supportive counterparties, and are still in the process of restructuring the remaining exposure," he said in a statement.
AirAsia has also applied for bank loans in countries it operates in to shore up liquidity, the statement said. The initiatives so far are expected to result in at least a 30 per cent cost reduction year-on-year in 2020, said the group, and it is hopeful of further cost reductions.
AirAsia had received proposals from investment bankers, lenders and potential investors last month to help the airline cope with the coronavirus crisis.
The company said on Monday that it had ongoing deliberations for joint ventures and collaborations that might result in additional third-party investments in specific segments of the group's business. REUTERS
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